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As part of the 70th anniversary of Australian-German diplomatic relations, the National Museum live-streamed the Humboldt launch of Songlines in Berlin to Canberra.

The Museum’s Director, Dr Mathew Trinca AM, and Germany’s Ambassador to Australia, Dr Thomas Fitschen, spoke from the Museum’s Gandel Atrium as part of the live-stream launch, which also included a Welcome to Country in language by Ngambri and Ngunnawal custodian Paul Girrawah House.

Dr Mathew Trinca AM, Director of the National Museum:

This is a momentous occasion for the National Museum of Australia and our award-winning exhibition, Songlines: Tracking the Seven Sisters – one of the first major international shows to be displayed at the Humboldt Forum in Berlin. We are immensely proud to be sharing the foundational Australian stories with German audiences, who I know will be as captivated by this award-winning show as Australian audiences were, when the exhibition showed in Canberra.

It is fitting that Songlines is on display in Berlin’s newest cultural centre in 2022, as we celebrate 70 years of Australian–German relations.

A man a two women inspect a large canvas painting in an exhibition space.

The opening of Songlines at the Humboldt Forum, Berlin, Germany

In Berlin, Dr Hartmut Dorgerloh, General Director of the Humboldt Forum, addressed the official launch which was attended by Margo Ngawa Neale, the National Museum’s Senior Indigenous Curator and Principal Advisor, and several Indigenous artists whose work features in the exhibition including Curtis Taylor, Brenda Douglas, Tapaya Edwards, Anawari Mitchell and Jennifer Mitchell.

Dr Hartmut Dorgerloh, General Director of the Humboldt Forum:

Songlines presents an extraordinary encounter with the art and cultures of Indigenous communities at the Humboldt Forum. The program is an important contribution to presenting this new site of international polyphony, trans-disciplinarity and experiential knowledge to a broad audience.

It also opens up new perspectives on how the Humboldt Forum can become an important site for self-determination, participation, transmission and mediation. Our visitors are invited to follow the trail of the Seven Sisters in the exhibition. We hope that they are as fascinated as we are by the stunning art and installations whilst ‘walking’ the songlines.

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